Two New Data Products Available from the Radar Wind Profiler

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Published: 19 March 2017

Time-height images are shown here of the wind speed at a uniform 10-minute and 50-meter resolution from the Radar Wind Profilers, part of the instrumentation at four observing facilities at the Southern Great Plains megasite. The facility name is shown in the top left corner in each panel. The ceilometer recorded first cloud base height (red) and the lifting condensation level calculated from the surface measurements (red) is shown in the top panel.

The Radar Wind Profiler (RWP) records the full Doppler spectrum in a wind mode and a precipitation mode. The data from the wind mode are used to calculate the first three moments of the Doppler spectrum (reflectivity, mean Doppler velocity, and spectrum width) with the mean Doppler velocity further used to retrieve boundary layer winds.

The retrieved winds are often used for forcing model simulations and evaluating them. Here, the raw Doppler spectrum data collected during the wind mode was used to recalculate the moments using an improved noise estimate. Further, the profiles of boundary layer winds were retrieved at a uniform 10-min resolution at all locations using the improved algorithm. Two RWP datastreams are produced:

RWP-Wind evaluation data are available for all of the observing facilities at the ARM Southern Great Plains (SGP) megasite and Eastern North Atlantic (ENA) observatory for the summer months of 2015 and 2016. More information on the value-added product is available in the README file, which accompanies the data files in the ARM evaluation area. Efforts are currently underway to make the algorithm operational for continuous production.

During this evaluation period, please send any comments and suggestions related to the product to Virendra Ghate. Feedback will assist in improving the data product prior to its full release. To access the data set, please browse the ARM Data Archive. (Go here to create an account to download the data.)

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The ARM Climate Research Facility is a national scientific user facility funded through the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science. The ARM Facility is operated by nine Department of Energy national laboratories.